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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 119

387.01hunters, from the Curragh, and confusionaries and the authori-
387.01+Curragh of Kildare (racecourse)
387.01+confession
387.01+VI.B.1.115n (r): 'authorities'
387.02ties, Noord Amrikaans and Suid Aferican cattleraiders (so they
387.02+Dutch Noord Amerikaans: North American
387.02+Dutch Zuid Afrikaans: Afrikaans Suid Afrikaans: South African
387.02+Latin Afer: Africa
387.02+VI.B.1.105k (r): 'cattleraiders'
387.02+Handbook of the Ulster Question 4: 'In the third and fourth centuries... the Irish came to be known in Latin by the name Scotti or Scots, probably an old Celtic word meaning "raiders"'
387.03say) all over like a tiara dullfuoco, in his grey half a tall hat and
387.03+Tierra del Fuego, South America
387.03+Italian del fuoco: some fire
387.03+Motif: 7 items of clothing [.03-.06]
387.03+half a tall hat [386.17]
387.04his amber necklace and his crimson harness and his leathern jib
387.04+Joyce: Ulysses.4.285: (Bloom of Milly) 'I gave her the amberoid necklace she broke'
387.04+Joyce: Ulysses.5.343: (Bloom of scapulars on the shoulders of women at a sodality meeting) 'crimson halters'
387.04+Colloquial cut of his jib: his personal appearance
387.04+jib: triangular stay-sail
387.05and his cheapshein hairshirt and his scotobrit sash and his para-
387.05+sheepskin
387.05+German schein: appearance; shine
387.05+Bédier: Le Roman de Tristan et Iseut 172: (of Iseult) 'Iseut la Blonde revêtit un cilice' (French 'Iseut the Fair-Haired donned a hair-shirt')
387.05+VI.C.12.155g (r): === VI.B.14.151g ( ): 'Pelagius (Scotobrit)' [358.27]
387.05+The Catholic Encyclopedia vol. XI, 'Pelagius and Pelagianism', 604b: (of Pelagius) 'While the most trustworthy witnesses... are quite explicit in assigning Britain as his native country, as is apparent from his cognomen of Brito or Britannicus, Jerome (Præf. in Jerem., lib. I and III) ridicules him as a "Scot" (loc. cit., "habet enim progeniem Scoticæ gentis de Britannorum vicinia")'
387.05+sashes worn by Orangemen
387.05+Greek parapelagios: along the sea (Armorica)
387.06pilagian gallowglasses (how do you do, jaypee, Elevato!) to find
387.06+pilage: fur
387.06+Pelagian heresy
387.06+VI.B.1.106h (r): 'Gallowglasses —sbirds foreign soldiers' (dash dittos 'Gallow'; a line joins first word and last two words) [388.25]
387.06+Handbook of the Ulster Question 9: 'In Ulster especially a new factor in Irish history appeared. This was the "galloglass" organisation — Gall-oglaich, "foreign soldiers." They got their name because they came from the Norse kingdom established about a century earlier by Sumarlidi in Argyle and the Hebrides... Everywhere they supplied what the Irish had not possessed for centuries, standing forces of well-trained, well-armed soldiers, ready for either field or garrison duty. The galloglass immigration lasted continuously from about 1250 to 1600, and introduced into Ireland, and especially into Ulster a very large new element, half-Norse in origin'
387.06+Anglo-Irish gallowglass: a heavily-armed mercenary foot-soldier, usually Scottish or Norse, in the service of an Irish chieftain (from Irish gall: foreigner + Irish óglach: warrior)
387.06+J.P.
387.06+Italian elevato: elevated
387.07out all the improper colleges (and how do you do, Mr Dame
387.07+Peter: Dublin Fragments, Social and Historic 102: (of Swift) 'In a romance dealing with the story of his life, written some years ago, we get a picture of... women at the doors of their dwellings saying softly, "Good evening, Mr. Dane", as he went by; there is no reason why the sketch should not be a true one' (Anglo-Irish Pronunciation Dane: Dean)
387.08James? Get out of my way!), forkbearded and bluetoothed and
387.08+Sweyn Forkbeard: son of Harald Bluetooth, Danish king
387.09bellied and boneless, from Strathlyffe and Aylesburg and North-
387.09+Ivar the Boneless, Viking
387.09+Strathclyde, Aylesbury, Northumberland and Anglesey all ravaged by Vikings
387.09+Liffey Street, Ailesbury Road, Northumberland Road and Anglesea Road, Dublin
387.10umberland Anglesey, the whole yaghoodurt sweepstakings and
387.10+Yahoos: a race of humanoid brutes in Swift: Gulliver's Travels, who live alongside the Houyhnhnms, a race of intelligent horses
387.10+yoghurt
387.10+Armenian joghovourt: people
387.10+sweepstake
387.11all the horsepowers. But now, talking of hayastdanars and
387.11+Motif: auspices
387.11+Armenian Hayasdan: Armenia
387.11+Danes
387.12wolkingology and how our seaborn isle came into exestuance,
387.12+Dutch wolk: cloud
387.12+vulcanology: study of volcanoes
387.12+Latin exaestuans: boiling up
387.12+existence
387.12+Latin aestuarium: estuary
387.13(the explutor, his three andesiters and the two pantellarias) that
387.13+*E*, *VYC* and *IJ* (Motif: 2&3)
387.13+exploiter
387.13+exploder
387.13+Latin plutor: rainmaker
387.13+'plutonic action' of volcanoes
387.13+Andes: mountain range, South America
387.13+andesite: volcanic rock
387.13+Pantelleria: Mediterranean volcanic island
387.13+pantellerite: kind of volcanic rock
387.14reminds me about the manausteriums of the poor Marcus of Lyons
387.14+Latin monasterium: monastery
387.14+hysteria
387.14+Irenaeus of Lyons: famous Christian theologian
387.15and poor Johnny, the patrician, and what do you think of the four
387.15+VI.B.1.097c (r): 'patrician' [386.29]
387.15+Motif: The four of them [.31]
387.16of us and there they were now, listening right enough, the four
387.16+
387.17saltwater widowers, and all they could remembore, long long ago
387.17+Cluster: Forget and Remember
387.17+bore
387.17+J.C. Mangan: The Time of the Barmecides: 'To the old, old time, long, long ago' [.21]
387.18in the olden times Momonian, throw darker hour sorrows, the
387.18+VI.B.2.149j (b): 'olden'
387.18+VI.B.1.042e (r): 'Momonian' [385.13] [390.04] [392.04]
387.18+Momonian: of Munster (from Latin Momonia: Munster)
387.18+Thomas Moore: Irish Melodies: song The Prince's Day: 'Tho' dark are our sorrows'
387.18+Motif: dark/fair [.19]
387.19princest day, when Fair Margrate waited Swede Villem, and Lally
387.19+song Fair Margaret and Sweet William
387.19+wedded
387.19+Hungarian villám: lightning
387.19+Lally Tompkins (*S*) [067.11] [096.19]
387.20in the rain, with the blank prints, now extincts, after the wreak
387.20+Black Prince: Prince Edward 1330-76, Duke of Cornwall
387.20+Longfellow: The Wreck of the Hesperus: 'the reef of Norman's Woe' (an actual rocky reef off the coast of Massachusetts, against which the ship in the poem crashes, drowning all aboard)
387.21of Wormans' Noe, the barmaisigheds, when my heart knew no
387.21+Richard D'Alton Williams: The Barmaid Sighs
387.21+J.C. Mangan: The Time of the Barmecides (Barmecides were an 8th century Persian noble family) [.17]
387.22care, and after that then there was the official landing of Lady
387.22+VI.B.1.118j (r): 'official' [.28] [388.11]
387.22+Lady Ceaser: legendary colonist of Ireland before the Deluge
387.23Jales Casemate, in the year of the flood 1132 S.O.S., and the
387.23+Julius Caesar (landing in Britain)
387.23+Sir Roger Casement tried to arrange a German weapon deal for the 1916 Easter Rising, but was arrested on landing in Tralee Bay
387.23+Motif: 1132
387.24christening of Queen Baltersby, the Fourth Buzzersbee, accord-
387.24+queen bee
387.24+Battersby [386.24]
387.24+VI.B.2.179h (b): 'B the Great (the 4th)'
387.25ing to Her Grace the bishop Senior, off the whate shape, and
387.25+Joyce: Dubliners: 'Grace' (Cluster: Graces) [.28] [.33]
387.25+White Ship: a ship that sank in the English Channel in 1120, taking with it almost all aboard, including Edward I's son and heir apparent, whose death led to a succession crisis and triggered the civil war known as The Anarchy [608.29]
387.26then there was the drowning of Pharoah and all his pedestrians
387.26+Exodus 14:28: 'And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them'
387.27and they were all completely drowned into the sea, the red sea,
387.27+
387.28and then poor Merkin Cornyngwham, the official out of the
387.28+Martin Cunningham: a character in Joyce: Ulysses and Joyce: Dubliners: 'Grace', based on Matthew F. Kane, an official in Dublin Castle, who drowned swimming off Dún Laoghaire on 10 July 1904 [.25] [.33]
387.28+King Mark of Cornwall
387.28+Slang merkin: counterfeit hair for the female genitalia
387.28+VI.B.1.118j (r): 'official' [.22] [388.11]
387.29castle on pension, when he was completely drowned off Erin
387.29+
387.30Isles, at that time, suir knows, in the red sea and a lovely
387.30+Keane: The Towers and Temples of Ancient Ireland 471: 'Suir (Irish), a mermaid' (Old Irish suire: sea nymphs, mermaids)
387.31mourning paper and thank God, as Saman said, there were no
387.31+VI.B.2.076e (b): 'mourning paper (Hurry!)'
387.31+Pascal: La Démence Précoce 52: (of the mentally ill) 'Une malade... à la nouvelle de la mort de son frère, éclata de rire et dit qu'elle était contente parce qu'elle aurait des lettres bordées de noir' (French 'A patient... at the news of her brother's death, burst out laughing and said that she was happy because she would have letters bordered in black')
387.31+morning paper
387.31+song One More Drink for the Four of Us: 'glory be to God that there are no more of us' (but Joyce regularly has 'thank God'; Motif: The four of them) [.15]
387.31+Keane: The Towers and Temples of Ancient Ireland 471: 'Saman (Irish), the Judge of departed souls' (associated with Irish Samhain: All Hallows' Day, a Celtic festival celebrating the beginning of the winter half-year)
387.31+someone
387.32more of him. And that now was how it was. The arzurian deeps
387.32+Arthurian: of King Arthur and his legends
387.32+azure
387.33o'er his humbodumbones sweeps. And his widdy the giddy is
387.33+Archaic o'er: over
387.33+nursery rhyme Humpty Dumpty
387.33+Dublin Pronunciation widdy: widow
387.33+Martin Cunningham's wife is associated with drunkenness and widowhood (Joyce: Ulysses.15.3855: 'umbrella sways drunkenly... Under the umbrella appears Mrs Cunningham in merry widow hat'; Joyce: Dubliners: 'Grace': 'Mr Cunningham... had married... an incurable drunkard') [.25] [.28]
387.34wreathing her murmoirs as her gracest triput to the Grocery
387.34+writing her memoirs
387.34+murmurs
387.34+Grace's (Cluster: Graces) [.25]
387.34+greatest tribute
387.34+Latin triput: solemn religious dance
387.34+Grocery Traders' Monthly (periodical)
387.35Trader's Manthly. Mind mand gunfree by Gladeys Rayburn!
387.35+My Man Godfrey (film)
387.35+Danish mand: man
387.35+Humphrey
387.35+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Rayburn! Runtable's...} | {Png: ...Rayburn. Runtable's...}
387.36Runtable's Reincorporated. The new world presses. Where the
387.36+runt: hag, dwarf
387.36+Round Table
387.36+New World: America [388.01]
387.36+Motif: old/new


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